State v. Kittilstad

603 N.W.2d 732, 231 Wis. 2d 245, 1999 Wisc. LEXIS 341
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1999
Docket98-1456-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 603 N.W.2d 732 (State v. Kittilstad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Kittilstad, 603 N.W.2d 732, 231 Wis. 2d 245, 1999 Wisc. LEXIS 341 (Wis. 1999).

Opinion

JON P. WILCOX, J.

¶1. The defendant, Richard L. Kittilstad, seeks review of a published decision of the court of appeals, State v. Kittilstad, 222 Wis. 2d 204, 585 N.W.2d 925 (Ct. App. 1998), which affirmed, on interlocutory appeal, the circuit court's denial of his motion challenging the bindover and the charges in the information.

¶ 2. The State has charged the defendant with four counts of soliciting prostitution under Wis. Stat. § 944.32 (1995-96) 1 and one count of extortion under Wis. Stat. § 943.30(1). The charges are based on the testimony of five Panamanian students whom the defendant sponsored to come to the United States. At the preliminary examination, the students testified that the defendant repeatedly offered to pay them if they would bring women back to his house where they were staying, have sex with them, and allow him to watch. One student testified that the defendant threatened to throw him out of his home and interfere with his study program if the student refused his requests. The defendant argues that this evidence, even if true, cannot establish solicitation of prostitution or extortion as those offenses are defined in the Wisconsin Statutes.

*250 ¶ 3. Like the circuit court and the court of appeals, we conclude that the statutes the defendant is charged with violating encompass the conduct alleged at the preliminary examination. We affirm the decision of the court of appeals.

KH

¶ 4. In November 1997 police investigated allegations against the defendant, Richard L. Kittilstad, a Lutheran minister who had sponsored several young Panamanian men in their studies at Chippewa Valley Technical College. A criminal complaint was filed charging him with six counts of soliciting prostitution contrary to Wis. Stat. § 944.32. Before the preliminary examination, the defendant moved to dismiss the complaint on the grounds that it was defective because the facts stated in it failed to support the charges. Judge Eric J. Wahl reserved his decision on the motion until after the preliminary hearing.

¶ 5. The preliminary hearing took place on January 20,1998. The State presented the testimony of five students.

¶ 6. The first witness testified that he arranged to come to the United States as a student and live with the defendant in Augusta, Wisconsin, arriving on May 9, 1996. The day after he arrived, the defendant began talking to him about sex. After a couple of months, the defendant began offering the witness money if he would bring a woman to the home, have sex with her, and let him watch. The defendant offered to pay him different amounts of money, between thirty and eighty dollars, depending on the particular sex acts involved. Once, after the witness ran up a large phone bill, the defendant said that the only way to pay it off would be to bring fourteen different women to the house during *251 the next month, have sex with each of them, and let the defendant watch. According to the witness, the defendant made these requests repeatedly, once a week or so, over an eighteen-month period. The witness moved out of the defendant's home in November 1997.

¶ 7. The second witness gave similar testimony. He testified about one particular incident in which he wanted to take a martial arts course. He said that the defendant offered to pay for the course if the witness would bring a woman home and have sex with her in the room above the defendant's room. At other times,. the defendant offered to reduce the witness's phone bill in exchange for allowing the defendant to watch him have sex with women. The witness reported that the defendant made more than ten similar requests. The witness complained to a counselor at his school about the requests sometime in 1997. Since moving out of the defendant's home in November 1997 he has been supported by the defendant's church.

¶ 8. The next witness also gave similar testimony. A few months after his arrival at the defendant's home in May 1995, the defendant began offering him money, clothes, or favors, such as the use of the defendant's car, if the witness would bring women to the house and have sex with them. He testified that "anytime I go out with a different woman he wanted me to bring that woman home." He estimated that the defendant made more than five such requests, until the time he moved out of the home in the spring of 1997.

¶ 9. The fourth witness, who arrived at the defendant's home in May 1996, gave substantially the same testimony. He reported that a few weeks after his arrival the defendant offered to pay him twenty to forty dollars if he would bring a woman home and have sex with her in the room above the defendant's room. The *252 defendant made many similar requests over the course of the next year, about twice a month on average. The witness moved out of the defendant's home in May 1997.

¶ 10. The last student to testify arrived in the United States in May 1996. He stated that about a week and a half after his arrival, the defendant told him that if he did not have sex with a woman at the house, the defendant would throw him out of the house and try to force him to leave school and return to Panama. The witness stated that over the course of the year, the defendant repeated this threat more than twenty-five times. The witness moved out in the spring of 1997.

¶ 11. The preliminary examination testimony is somewhat unclear as to whether this witness ultimately moved out of the defendant's home by his own choice or was kicked out. In response to the question "Why did you move out?" he answered, "Because I wasn't living comfortable hearing everytime about sex and accusing me and treating me like a deer in the woods in the hunting season." However, he later testified as follows:

Q. (Continuing) Mr. Kittilstad didn't kick you out?
A. He did.
Q. He did or didn't?
A. He did.
Q. He did?
A. Yeah.

Finally, in response to the question, "And do you know if he ever did anything to get you to go back to Panama?" he gave this response:

*253 A: . . .1 don't remember and I can't tell you anything because when I move out of the house I did it because he always keep pressuring me like this. . .he'd say, you got to move out and your last days, I don't remember whatever day that, in the past.

Taken as a whole, the witness's testimony could support findings that the defendant repeatedly threatened to expel him from his home, to interfere with his study program, and to try to have him removed from the United States if he refused to have sex with women in the defendant's house.

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Bluebook (online)
603 N.W.2d 732, 231 Wis. 2d 245, 1999 Wisc. LEXIS 341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-kittilstad-wis-1999.